Los Angeles city of fallen angels and broken Dreams
Davis, Mike. "Fortress L.A." Geography 100 Course Reader. New York: Vintage Books, 1992. 223-263.Kaplan, Robert. "Travels into America's Future." The Atlantic Monthly (August 1998): 37-61.Queenan, Joe. "Yo, San Francisco, You're No L.A." Los Angeles Times Magazine (October 25, 1998): 20-21. The City of Angels; to some, Los Angeles is the embodiment of the American dream- a sort of west coast "Statue of Liberty," with opportunity at every corner and in every doorway. The city of razzle-dazzle, movie stars, and Hollywood's walk of fame; for nearly a century Los Angeles has been perceived as the town of dreams. These are, of course, gross exaggerations, as is the perception that Los Angeles is the city of ceaseless riots and brutal racism. Naturally, as in every urban city, there is to an extent some truth in these myths, and because of Los Angeles' unprecedented size and diverse population it tends to be picked on more often than even New York. Los Angeles is an anomaly- there is no other city in the world that could ever begin to rival it. Because people often hate what they cannot explain, writers especially love to
The city of Los Angeles is a place unlike anywhere in the world, with world-class museums and restaurants, one of the world's largest and most diverse populations, and the headquarters to some of the world's most powerful and influential corporations, it is a magnet for stereotypes. In cities like Los Angeles, on the bad edge of post modernity, one observes an unprecedented tendency to merge urban design, architecture, and the police apparatus into a single, comprehensive security effort (224). With all of these things to consider (or disregard), how does one, then, take a look at Los Angeles through an untarnished glass? Writers especially love to tear Los Angeles apart. Among the white population, Jews are the largest ethnic group. In his article "Travels into America's Future," though initially relying on the cliche of 'Los Angeles as the embodiment of the American dream' to catch the readers' attentions, writer Robert D. It is a sprawling city, incorporating many different cultural areas. People from all over the world come to Los Angeles hoping to find opportunity and freedom from oppressors, people like Zaheer Viriji, a twenty-seven year old ethnic-Indian immigrant from the East African Nation of Zimbabwe. By making his readers doubt and question him, Davis has lost credibility and perhaps the agreement of his reader. ": support his statements with facts and statistics. On first approach, Los Angeles appears to be a utopia, with "sandstone cliffs, a peacock-blue ocean, and and an endless bar of cream colored sand.
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